Related Links

Paris - Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel is the woman to watch — or fear, or confront — in Europe this week.

The leaders of Italy, France and Spain are pressing their northern neighbour at a European Union summit starting on Thursday to agree to share debts before markets push the eurozone any closer to collapse. The EU's top officials and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have argued the same.

Markets and investors, who felt burned in the past by promises they saw as too weak to solve Europe's debt crisis, want a breakthrough this week to ensure the region's debt crisis doesn't engulf the world economy, but they aren't expecting one.

Any breakthrough would hinge on Merkel.

Merkel isn't likely to budge. She has argued repeatedly — and again on Wednesday — that short-term solutions such as pooled debt or a more active European Central Bank are useless unless governments prove they can manage their budgets. She wants a grand, ambitious political union first.

And she brings the weight of the continent's biggest, strongest economy with her to the meetings in Brussels.

Sacrifices

While they may not be able to change Merkel's mind, other leaders who avoided confronting her in the past may not hold back this time.

Italy's Prime Minister Mario Monti, at risk of losing his job because of voter frustration with austerity measures, is increasingly outspoken.

Speaking in Brussels on Wednesday night, he said Italians have made great sacrifices and gotten their country's deficit under control. But yields on Italian debt soared to one-year highs anyway.

If Italians become discouraged that their efforts aren't helping, it could unleash "political forces which say 'let European integration, let the euro, let this or that large country go to hell', which would be a disaster for the whole of the European Union," Monti said.

Monti said he's ready to work until Sunday night — instead of the scheduled Friday end of the summit — to ensure that leaders produce a growth package convincing enough to calm financial markets.

Spain's prime minister is sounding especially desperate.A lot to lose

"The most urgent issue is financing," Mariano Rajoy said on Wednesday. "We can't continue for a long time to finance ourselves with these prices; there are many institutions and financial entities that don't have access to financial markets."

Simon Tilford of the Centre for Economic Reform said, "We're seeing the French, Italians and Spanish showing a greater readiness to act as one."

In the past, they were reluctant to isolate Merkel, he said. "But that flexible approach ... has delivered very little. They have grown alarmed and frustrated," he said.

"If anyone is to lead the charge, it may be Monti, he is the one who has the most credibility on the European stage" — and the most to lose if pressure on Merkel fails.

While France has been the traditional partner — and counterweight — to Germany in European dealings in the past, French President Francois Hollande is the least experienced head of state at the summit.

He has just seven weeks of governing under his belt, and built his career as a consensus-builder instead of a confrontational rabble-rouser. And his country's economy is weaker, with growth forecast at just 0.4% this year.

Hollande was grinning broadly on Wednesday night at the one concession he has been able to wring from Merkel so far, an agreement to put growth on the European agenda alongside austerity measures.

Push for growth

Merkel, standing stiffly at Hollande's side ahead of bilateral talks in Paris, agreed to push for a €130bn stimulus package that Hollande has vaunted but that is largely just a re-packaging of existing EU funds.

Shortly after his meeting with Merkel, Hollande talked to President Barack Obama about their common push for growth.

Even if leaders of all 26 other EU nations line up against Merkel, she cannot bend very far.

She needs Parliament to approve the eurozone's permanent rescue fund, the European Stability Mechanism, and the European budget discipline pact, both expected to happen on Friday. And many measures floated as possible solutions could require changes to Germany's constitution.

Amid calls for Greece or other Mediterranean states — and even Germany — to pull out of the euro, Merkel argued on Wednesday for greater unity. "We need more Europe. Markets are waiting for that."

But she also insisted that jointly issued eurobonds — which some experts say would help defuse the prospect of unaffordable bailouts for Spain or Italy by making their debt less expensive to pay off — would be "economically wrong and counterproductive" before governments have shown they can comply with budget rules.

24.com publishes all comments posted on articles provided that they adhere to our Comments Policy. Should you wish to report a comment for editorial review, please do so by clicking the 'Report Comment' button to the right of each comment.

Tell us a bit about yourself:

Saving your profile

Settings

News24 allows you to edit the display of certain components based on a location.
If you wish to personalise the page based on your preferences, please select a
location for each component and click "Submit" in order for the changes to
take affect.

Your Location*

Weather*

Always remember my setting

Saving your settings

Facebook Sign-In

Hi News addict,

Join the News24 Community to be involved in breaking the news.

Log in with Facebook to comment and personalise news, weather and listings.